They now have air guns shoot 3000 fps with a 250 gr bullet
And muzzle loader even faster
3 shots at 300 at a half inch
And muzzle loader even faster
3 shots at 300 at a half inch
I was actually talking about the energy at 300-500 yards matching that of a 300 win mag.No its not. My buddy builds them and they shot them at Williamsport. Typical 5 shot groups at 600 are 2 to 3 inches. At 100 yards they are one hole guns and many groups in the zeros and ones. He even shot a 3 shot group at 1000 of three inches. These guns really shoot. A 400 grain slug at around upper 2000's fps. Matt
YesIt may well be illegal there...idk. I'm not advocating hunting illegally either but it does seem like a hard law to enforce. What do they do, have you pull the breech plug and dump the powder out?![]()
Looking to purchase a Long range muzzleloader for a whitetail hunt later this year.
Is there anyone who has personal experience with them?
Thank You
Ryan
Years ago I considered seriously about buying one of the original "Ultimate Muzzleloaders" made by Ken Johnston of Michigan ( which i think all other companies followed). We spoke and I was so close to getting one and decided I couldn't justify the cost with having so many other toys(guns) I play with. Read all the ballistics and realized those Parker bullets really do give precision rifle like accuracy. Read stories of elk kills at 800 yards etc. Saw various live kill vids with his guns and they were no joke. They flat out did what they said they did. Killed at Extreme long range( for Muzzleloaders). I know Remington bought the name and of course watered down that performance but the gun looks and operates the same. For me, a typical muzzleloader shot is no further than 200 yards max. My White super 91 will do that very easily. I'll stick with the breech load rifles for the long range work but am still in Aw over the sheer accuracy and performance of those modern front stuffers.Smokeless mz's are very impressive. Frankly, I'm surprised more people on this site haven't played with them. Aside from the aforementioned areas where they can't be used and the few traditionalists left out there, they are the only way to go, IMO. Savage needs to step up production along with marketing. They have a really good thing going there but have not done well with marketing them. Just look on this thread at the people who have little or no knowledge of their existence. The Savage is impressive but the customs are light years ahead if you can stand the price. You have to pretty much forget everything you've ever heard and thought about muzzle loaders and start with an open mind. Be ready to have your mind blown by what they can do.
Me too! When ya think about all the brass prep and such that we do for cf...all that is gone and made better.Years ago I considered seriously about buying one of the original "Ultimate Muzzleloaders" made by Ken Johnston of Michigan ( which i think all other companies followed). We spoke and I was so close to getting one and decided I couldn't justify the cost with having so many other toys(guns) I play with. Read all the ballistics and realized those Parker bullets really do give precision rifle like accuracy. Read stories of elk kills at 800 yards etc. Saw various live kill vids with his guns and they were no joke. They flat out did what they said they did. Killed at Extreme long range( for Muzzleloaders). I know Remington bought the name and of course watered down that performance but the gun looks and operates the same. For me, a typical muzzleloader shot is no further than 200 yards max. My White super 91 will do that very easily. I'll stick with the breech load rifles for the long range work but am still in Aw over the sheer accuracy and performance of those modern front stuffers.
Have any data or experience that prompted your inquiry?And enjoy Encore accuracy verses that of a bolt action.
So how accurate is a Encore at +300yds? (as the OP is looking for)
Topic is "Long Range Muzzleloader", not assumption runs rampant.
... Savage needs to step up production along with marketing. They have a really good thing going there but have not done well with marketing them. Just look on this thread at the people who have little or no knowledge of their existence. The Savage is impressive but the customs are light years ahead if you can stand the price. ....
I think savage stop making them was because of the lack of salesI don't think Savage makes them any more, and I doubt that they will. The problem with a muzzle loader is that there is no stupid limiter like there is on a cartridge. With a cartridge stupid is limited by case capacity. Obviously it's not a guarantee, but it's at least something. With a ML there is nothing to prevent you from making a pipe bomb and blowing it up while you hold on to it. That has happened. Savage was sued, and I am not sure but I think they may have lost at least one case. Thus there is no longer any manufacturer that makes smokeless MLs that I know of.
The 45 caliber bullet is going faster then that and they are heavier.. These are custom bullets with high BC. They take a piece of the barrel and make a die to size the bullet for that barrel. It also puts the grooves in them. If you seen one shoot, you would be impressed. They are not shooting offhand. They are shooting off rests and bipods. Matthttps://read.nxtbook.com/pgc/huntingtrapping/20182019/deer_hunting_regulations.html
PA laws any long ML 44 caliber or larger. Nothing mentioned about powder type. The bullet drop from a .44 or .50 cal ML past 250 yrds has to be like a brick. Is there a ballistic calculator program for these big bullets. Are you shooting cast lead or jacketed bullets. How many hunters could honestly hit a deer at 500 yrds standing with a .243 Win? I will see if I can plug some numbers into the Berger prorams.
The biggest bullet in the Berger program is a .338 250 or 300 gr bullet. Per the chart for 250 gr .338 bullet at 2650 MZ 54" drop at 500 yrds. A 45 cal bullet would have more drop.
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Smokeless mz's are very impressive. Frankly, I'm surprised more people on this site haven't played with them. Aside from the aforementioned areas where they can't be used and the few traditionalists left out there, they are the only way to go, IMO. Savage needs to step up production along with marketing. They have a really good thing going there but have not done well with marketing them. Just look on this thread at the people who have little or no knowledge of their existence. The Savage is impressive but the customs are light years ahead if you can stand the price. You have to pretty much forget everything you've ever heard and thought about muzzle loaders and start with an open mind. Be ready to have your mind blown by what they can do.
I shoot a Hankins 45cal built on a Remington action, Brux barrel, Manners T4 stock, and Nightforce 8-32x scope. This rifle shoots a 325gr Pittman AccuMax bullet at 2872fps generating almost 6000 ft-lbs of energy at the muzzle. Accuracy with this rifle is unbelievable out to the limit of my shooting range of 400 yds. At 400 yds with this load I regularly shoot sub MOA groups. Recoil is intense but i built this for hunting Kansas during the mid September ML season where my setups were more for rifle shooters. Over the years i have taken some great bucks but the biggest deer i saw were out of range and this is why i built the smokeless rifle. The deer i shot this year was at just 230 yds and dropped in his tracks. the wound is on the entry side and there was not an exit. The rifle is a hammer.